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Theodor Habicht
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Theodor Habicht (4 April 1898 – 31 January 1944) was a leading political figure in . He played a leading role in the Austrian Nazi Party. During World War II, he was involved in the administration of Nazi-occupied Norway until his dismissal by Adolf Hitler. He later served in the and was killed in action on the Eastern Front at Nevel in 1944.


Early years
Born in and educated in his hometown and , he volunteered for the German Imperial Army in 1915, serving on the Western Front and at in ., Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890, p. 169 Briefly involved with after his 1919 , he soon took part in skirmishes against the Spartacist League before settling into various low-level white-collar jobs.


Nazi leader
Habicht joined the in July 1926 and established a number of local journals for the group. In April 1927 he became Deputy Ortsgruppenleiter (Local Group Leader) in Wiesbaden. He soon moved up to Ortsgruppenleiter and from 20 May 1928 was the leader of the Nazis on the Wiesbaden City Council. In 1930, Habicht was elected to the Provincial of Hessen-Nassau. At the July 1932 parliamentary election and the next two elections, he was elected to the Reichstag from the Nazi Party . From the November 1933 election forward, he represented electoral constituency 19 (Hesse-Nassau) and he was reelected at each subsequent election through 1938. Theodore Habicht entry in the Reichstag Members Database

Under orders from , he was sent to Austria in 1931 to oversee the reorganization of the Austrian Nazi Party. Later given the title Landesinspekteur, Habicht was the effective leader of the Austrian Nazis although titualar leadership rested with Landesleiter Alfred Proksch. Under Habicht, the Nazis experienced growth, mostly at the expense of the , many of whose members switched over to ., Eichmann: His Life and Crimes, , 2005, p. 29 Initially, Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuß attempted a conciliation, notably offering Habicht two Nazi cabinet seats, before trying to get to exert pressure on Hitler to restrain Habicht's anti-government activities.H. James Burgwyn, Italian Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, 1918–1940, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1997, p. 88

Habicht was deported in March 1933 after the Austrian government finally decided to ban the Nazi Party outright. In response, Habicht set up a leadership-in-exile in that directed a campaign of terror against the Dollfuß regime and culminated in and the murder of Dollfuß in July 1934 under the command of Austrian SS leader . An unpopular figure with many of the Austrians, he was excluded from the country after the failure, as Hitler placed the blame on Habicht, who had been responsible for determining the details of the coup attempt.


Later life
Severely discredited by the failure, Habicht went into seclusion in the Mountains before he was allowed to take up the post of Oberbürgermeister (Mayor) of in February 1937; he served until September 1939. He was then selected to be the next Oberbürgermeister of but was called up for military service and so he never formally took up that position.Lilla, Joachim, with the collaboration of Martin Döring and Andreas Schulz: Extras in Uniform: The members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical handbook including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from 1924. Droste, Düsseldorf, 2004, p. 203, .

His reputation partially restored, Habicht took up a more important role in November 1939, when he was appointed Undersecretary of State in the German Foreign Office. As part of his duties, he was sent to in 1940 to investigate the organisation of government in the newly-occupied territory, and he called for the removal of the government and its replacement with the Administrative Council. Initially, he had hoped to give any regime more legitimacy by placing the popular at its head, rather than the minor figure of Quisling, but Berg rejected any such settlement.Hans Fredrik Dahl, Quisling: A Study in Treachery, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 182–186

However, when Habicht's plans were rejected by Johan Nygaardsvold and Haakon VII of Norway, Hitler once again lost faith in Habicht and ordered him into the in September 1940. He spent the remainder of his life on the Eastern Front with the rank of and commanded an infantry company. He had been promoted to battalion commander shortly before he died in action at Nevel.


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